Clean up your act and sleep easier

You can’t see it, touch it, feel it and most can’t sense it, but it exists and is proving to be harmful to our health.
Headaches, insomnia, ringing in the ears, anxiety, muscle spams and trouble concentrating are just a few of the ill effects.
No, it is not your guilty conscious, it’s DIRTY ELECTRICITY! Sometimes referred to as EMF-electromagnetic fields.
What is the difference between clean & dirty electricity? “Clean electricity is safe electricity. Clean electricity has a smooth sine wave that goes up and down 60 times a second. Dirty electricity is electromagnetic pollution called transients and harmonics - operating in the 4 to 100 kilohertz frequency range - which contaminate the electrical supply.” According to Dr. Magda Havas, an associate professor and researcher at Trent University in Peterborough, Ontario and Dr. Samuel Milham, MD, MPH, researcher, author of Electrification and the Diseases of Civilization, and recipient of the Ramazzini prize.
Where does it come from?
• Computers
• Office equipment
• Television sets
• Wireless technologies
• Candescent fluorescent light bulbs
. . just to name a few
Sounds like it is everywhere! How do I avoid it?
*Give yourself a break and sleep in a bat cave -8 hours of no dirty electricity will do wonders for you, your health and your sleep!
~Take the cell phone out of your bedroom (they do make old fashioned alarms and the world will not stop turning if you don’t answer your phone during sleep time)
~Remove your laptop from the bedroom.
~Shut off all electronics and cover any light sources; in fact if you can shut the breaker off to your bedroom, you will be sleeping clean.
Check out this link to “11 Ways to Protect Yourself from Dirty Electricity” from Prevention for more tips and info.
Three more important tips for great sleep:
1. Keep your bedroom at a cool 68 degrees. Our bodies naturally cool down while we sleep and our bodies prefer this natural temperature. According to health expert Johnny Bowden "if the room is too hot, you have to “work” to keep the equilibrium and that interferes with good sleep".
2. Start the media break 1/2 hour before bed. Our bodies need to naturally wind down to acheive that all important recovery sleep. Dim the lights, turn off the TV, no email, no cell phone no media period for at least 1/2 hour before you hit the sack. This sets the tone for a good nights sleep.
3. Keep your bedroom as dark as a bat cave. Studies have shown the darker the room the better the sleep. Light, even as a slight as the minimal glow from the alarm clock can raise cortisol and disrupt sleep.
Don’t drive yourself batty about it, just sleep in a bat cave and let the dark night rise!




